Meta

Back to Snow Lion: Why Lion needs some work

In hindsight, I’m not sure why, but I upgraded my fantastic 11″ MacBook Air from 10.6 to 10.7 the day that Lion was released.

At first, I liked the changes. I still think that Mission Control is a nice improvement over Spaces and Expose, but otherwise, there aren’t many compelling new features for me in 10.7. Still, change is inevitable, so I may as well get used to the backwards scrolling, the noticeable drop in performance, and all of the other new changes, or so I thought until I started using 10.7 day-to-day.

Since August, I have been using 10.7 on a 24″ iMac, my 11″ MacBook Air, a 24″ iMac at work, and a 15″ MacBook Pro at work. It’s been more or less fine on all machines except the MacBook Air, which is the one I use the most.

On the Air, I’ve had spotty WiFi behaviour where it had been perfect previously, the occasional lock-up, and most alarmingly, it was through it that I learned of Preview and Finder’s new bad behaviour in 10.7.

Try this on a 10.6 machine:

Make a directory

Drop 20 images in

Name them in order: 1.jpg, 2.jpg, 3.pdf, 4.png etc.

Highlight them all

Open them in preview.

You will have a single window open with files 1.jpg, 2.jog, 3.pdf, 4.png… open. Now you can view them as a slideshow. Perfect, simple, obvious, hurray.

Now do the same thing in 10.7. I’ll wait.

…

See, what a mess? You will get some of the 20 images opening, out of order. Others will say “You downloaded this from the internet…” some will just not open.

Now, try doing this with seven folders of 20 images with a room full of people wanting to see slideshows. Even better, try it on day four of not enough sleep. I did. It wasn’t fun.

So, it’s back to 10.6 on the MacBook Air. I’ve only been running this way for an hour or so but the system is humming along nicely. It’s faster, scrolling works like it should, Preview works like it should, wifi is working perfectly. Perfect, simple, obvious, hurray.